From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Big Ugly" redirects here. For the film,
see The Big
Ugly (film).
An omnibus bill is a
proposed law that
covers a number of diverse or unrelated topics. Omnibus is
derived from Latin and
means "to, for, by, with or from everything". An omnibus bill is a
single document that
is accepted in a single vote by
a legislature but packages together several measures into one or
combines diverse subjects.
Because of their large size and scope,
omnibus bills limit opportunities for debate and scrutiny. Historically, omnibus bills have sometimes been used to
pass controversial amendments. For this reason, some consider omnibus bills to
be anti-democratic.[1]
In the United States, omnibus bills are sometimes known as
"Big Ugly" bills.[2][3] Examples
include reconciliation bills,
combined appropriations bills, and
private relief and claims bills.
Appropriations legislation
Main article: Omnibus spending bill
Omnibus legislation is routinely used by the United States Congress to group together
the budgets of all departments in one year in an omnibus spending bill. For
example, the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1993 was designed to help reduce
the federal deficit by approximately $496 billion over five years through
restructuring of the tax code.[4]
Historical examples
During the 19th century, there were three notable omnibus bills
in the US.
The Compromise of 1850 had five disparate
provisions designed by Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky. His
purpose was to pacify sectional differences that threatened to provoke the
secession of the slave
states. The Fugitive Slave Act was the most infamous of
the five compromise components, and was almost universally excoriated by abolitionists, the
chief exception being Sen. Daniel Webster of Massachusetts who
prioritized preservation of the Union. Senator Thomas Hart Benton, a Missouri slaveholder,
opposed the omnibus compromise as an "unmanageable mass of incongruous
bills, each an impediment to the other...."[5] While
this bill did not pass as the official Compromise of 1850, it got the ball
rolling. To satisfy members of Congress, Stephen A. Douglas separated the Compromise
back into 5 separate bills and got it passed. Ultimately, disunion and civil
war were delayed for a decade. In response, the 1861 Constitution of the
Confederate States would ban omnibus legislation,
requiring that every bill "shall relate to but one subject, and that shall
be expressed in the title" (Article 1, Section 9.20).
The Omnibus Act of June 1868 admitted seven southern U.S.
states as having satisfied the requirements of the Reconstruction Acts.[6]
The Omnibus Act of February 22, 1889 provided for the admission
of four new states to the Union — North Dakota, South
Dakota, Montana and Washington.
Other Countries
In Canada, one famous omnibus bill became the Criminal Law Amendment Act,
1968–69, a 126-page, 120-clause amendment to the Criminal Code passed under the leadership
of Pierre Elliot Trudeau who was then Justice
Minister in the government of Lester Pearson. This Act changed the law of the
land in matters as diverse as homosexuality, prostitution, abortion, gambling, gun
control and drunk driving.
Likewise, there was the Jobs and Growth Act (2012).
The SNC-Lavalin affair, which entailed the censure
of Justin
Trudeau by the Parliamentary Ethics Commissioner, was started when
the firm suggested to Trudeau that he include in his spring 2018 budget bill
the deferred prosecution
agreement measure that then-Attorney-General Wilson-Raybould refused
to sanction, culminating in her January 2019 ouster from government and the subsequent
scandal that surrounded it.[7]
The Greenhouse Gas Pollution
Pricing Act was created during the 42nd Parliament of Canada under
the mask of the Budget
Implementation Act, 2018, No. 1 in Part 4.
The SNC-Lavalin affair was created as Division
20 of Part 6.[8]
In the Republic of Ireland, the Second Amendment of the
Constitution was an omnibus constitutional law, enacted in 1941, that
made many unrelated changes to the country's fundamental law.
In Serbia, Omnibus law was adopted in 2002 that
regulated the autonomous status of Vojvodina.[9]
Similarly, in New Zealand, an omnibus bill was passed in
November 2016 that enacted legislation required for New Zealand to enter
the Trans Pacific Partnership.[10][11]
Section 55 of the
Constitution of Australia requires that laws imposing
taxation "deal only with the imposition of taxation" and "deal
with one subject of taxation only" (except those relating to customs and
excise); other purported provisions in a piece of tax legislation are of no
legal effect. This does not outlaw all omnibus bills, but renders
unconstitutional any omnibus bill imposing taxation.[12]
In October 2020, the People's Representative
Council of Indonesia passed
the Omnibus Law on Job Creation, a
controversial omnibus law that aims to attract foreign investment and reduce
business regulation, which the opponents say would be harmful to the
environment and threaten labor rights in existing law.[13] This
caused nationwide protests and
riots involving workers and students.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnibus_bill#cite_note-13
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea
Party Leader
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